"When the fabric of society is so rigid that it cannot change quickly enough, adjustments are achieved by social unrest and revolutions"
About this Quote
The key move is the passive construction: “adjustments are achieved.” It strips romance from revolution. Uprisings aren’t heroic pageants or villainous conspiracies; they’re the emergency mechanism that kicks in when incremental governance fails. That’s the subtext aimed at complacent elites: your preference for stability can become a kind of accelerant. By treating demands for faster change as illegitimate, you make them ungovernable.
Context matters. Orr wasn’t a professional incendiary but a politician shaped by the early-to-mid 20th century’s violent proof of concept: economic dislocation, mass hunger, labor conflict, and the ideological revolutions and counterrevolutions that followed. As a public figure associated with social welfare and nutrition, he’d have seen deprivation not as a private tragedy but as a political catalyst. Hunger doesn’t just injure bodies; it reorganizes loyalties.
What makes the line work is its pragmatic menace. It offers reform not as altruism but as risk management: loosen the weave voluntarily or watch it tear under stress. In an era that still fetishizes “stability,” Orr’s point lands like a diagnosis: rigidity is not strength; it’s delayed violence.
Quote Details
| Topic | Justice |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: Science and Peace (Nobel Peace Prize Lecture) (John Boyd Orr, 1949)
Evidence: When the fabric of society is so rigid that it cannot change quickly enough, adjustments are achieved by social unrest and revolutions.. This sentence appears in Lord (John) Boyd Orr’s Nobel Peace Prize lecture, delivered on December 12, 1949, at the Norwegian Nobel Institute. On the NobelPrize.org authoritative transcript it occurs in the section titled “Science Molds Society,” immediately after “But major adjustments do not take place without a struggle.” The Nobel site notes the lecture text is taken from Les Prix Nobel en 1949. I did not locate an earlier (pre–Dec 12, 1949) primary publication or speech instance in the web results; therefore, the earliest verifiable primary-source appearance I can confirm is this Nobel lecture on December 12, 1949. Other candidates (1) Quotations for the Fast Lane (2013) compilation96.1% ... John Major There is ... When the fabric of society is so rigid that it cannot change quickly enough, adjustments ... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Orr, John Boyd. (2026, February 20). When the fabric of society is so rigid that it cannot change quickly enough, adjustments are achieved by social unrest and revolutions. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/when-the-fabric-of-society-is-so-rigid-that-it-149546/
Chicago Style
Orr, John Boyd. "When the fabric of society is so rigid that it cannot change quickly enough, adjustments are achieved by social unrest and revolutions." FixQuotes. February 20, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/when-the-fabric-of-society-is-so-rigid-that-it-149546/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"When the fabric of society is so rigid that it cannot change quickly enough, adjustments are achieved by social unrest and revolutions." FixQuotes, 20 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/when-the-fabric-of-society-is-so-rigid-that-it-149546/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.










